Fed clarifies when it might raise short-term interest rates

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The meeting Wednesday is the first under the leadership of new Chair Janet Yellen.

By Martin Crutsinger
Associated Press
March 19, 2014

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Federal Reserve sought Wednesday to clarify a question that investors have been trying to determine: When it might start to raise short-term interest rates from record lows.

The Fed reaffirmed its plan to keep short-term rates low to help support the economy. But it no longer mentions a specific unemployment rate that might lead it eventually to raise short-term rates. The Fed says instead it will monitor ‘‘a wide range of information’’ on the job market, inflation and the economy before approving any rate increase.

The central bank also said it will cut its monthly long-term bond purchases by another $10 billion to $55 billion because it thinks the economy is strong enough to support further improvements in the job market.

The Fed announced the policies in a statement after its first meeting with Janet Yellen as chair. Yellen succeeded Ben Bernanke, who stepped down last month after eight years as Fed chairman.

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One reason for dropping a threshold unemployment rate, as Yellen among others have noted, is that the rate can overstate the job market’s health. In recent months, for example, the unemployment rate has fallen not so much because of robust hiring but because many people without a job have stopped looking for one. Once people stop looking for a job, they’re no longer counted as unemployed, and the rate can fall as a result.

The Fed’s previous statement had said it planned to keep short-term rates at record lows ‘‘well past’’ the time unemployment fell below 6.5 percent. The rate is now 6.7 percent. Several Fed officials had recently suggested scrapping the 6.5 percent threshold and instead describing more general changes in the job market and inflation that might trigger a rate increase.

A short-term rate increase would elevate borrowing costs and could hurt stock prices. On Wall Street, stocks fell modestly in the minutes after the Fed’s statement was released at 2 p.m. Eastern time. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note rose to 2.75 percent from 2.71 percent just before the Fed statement.

The Fed’s decision to drop the 6.5 percent unemployment threshold ‘‘represents the difficulty in finding the perfect economic indicator for explaining something as complex as the state of the labor market recovery and other considerations such as financial stability,’’ James Marple, senior economist at TD Economics, wrote in a research note.

More than five years ago, the Fed cut its benchmark short-term rate to a record low near zero, where it’s remained since. Most analysts think the Fed will keep its target for short-term rates near zero until mid to late 2015.

The Fed also updated its economic forecasts Wednesday. Fed officials expect the U.S. economy to grow at a steady if modest pace in 2014 despite weather-related setbacks this winter. The Fed is forecasting growth of 2.8 percent to 3 percent this year, a bit lower than its December projection of between 2.8 percent and 3.2 percent.

The forecast suggests that Fed policymakers will continue to pare their monthly bond purchases, which are intended to stimulate growth by keeping interest rates low. It is doing so despite challenges the U.S. economy and financial markets face, from a brutal winter that’s depressed growth, to fears about how Russia’s aggression toward Ukraine might slow the global economy.

In its statement explaining its action, the Fed noted that economic activity had ‘‘slowed during the winter months,’’ partly reflecting a brutal winter.

The Fed’s decision came on an 8-1 vote. Narayana Kocherlakota, president of the Fed’s regional bank in Minneapolis, cast the dissenting vote. Kocherlakota felt the changes the Fed made to its guidance on future short-term rate increases had weakened its credibility in raising inflation to the Fed’s target of 2 percent. Inflation is now running around 1 percent.